England -
Edgar Chadwick ('Holt started, and the ball
was at once taken down on the right and sent across to Bassett, who
centred to Chadwick, who
with a side shot scored in thirty seconds from the start'
1),
John Goodall ('on the left wing, broke away
in fine fashion and put through the goal' 14, 26), Jack
Southworth ('no sooner had the game restarted that he dashed off
in inimitable style and sent the ball through' 16).
Scotland - Jack Bell ('from a dashing run by Taylor,
who, passing across the ball, was sent into goal, Bell covering Toone
before he had time to return it.' 80)

Hitherto
Scotland has been wonderfully successful in their international matches
with England, and the 21st annual game was entered on with the record of
eleven victories to four in their favour. Last Saturday's encounter on
the Ranger's ground, Ibrox Park, Glasgow, furnished a great triumph for
England, whose whole team played with great brilliancy and justly
claimed the decisive success of four goals to one. The attendance
numbered some 25,000. Sellar won the toss and elected to play with the
wind in his favour, leaving the visitors to kick off. It may be noted
too that the Englishmen also had the sun in their faces. The match
started at a fast rate. Southworth turned the ball over to Chadwick and
Bassett on the right wing, and a brilliant piece of passing culminated
in a goal by Chadwick before a minute had elapsed...

...Reynolds and Holt enabled the
visitors' forwards to become the aggressors, and, after M'Leod had
frustrated an attempt by Southworth, a short pass from Chadwick gave
Goodall an opening, and the latter scored the second goal for England.
Quickly afterwards the visitors' forwards again rushed the ball to the
home lines, and Southworth, getting in possession, skilfully evaded the
full backs and gained a third goal. Still the Englishmen kept up the
pace, dribbling, passing, and kicking with an accuracy so remarkable as
to thoroughly baffle the home eleven. An attempt by one of the
left wings was well met by M'Leod, but the last-named almost immediately
failed to save a shot from Goodall, who obtained the fourth goal when
scarcely 25 minutes had elapsed...

The home team's efforts were
finally rewarded with an excellent goal by Bell... - The Times - Monday 4th
April, 1892

Preston
were without Bob Holmes, who was playing for England in Glasgow.

A 13th successive
victory for Sunderland, a league record, as they closed in on their
first Championship, with Preston faltering. Two weeks later, the
title was clinched.

IN OTHER NEWS...

It was on 1 April 1892 that Englishman
Fred Deeming, a serial killer, conman and bigamist who had committed crimes all
over the world, arrived in Melbourne to be tried for the murder of one
of his wives on Christmas Eve. Around six months earlier, he had
murdered his previous wife and four children at Rainhill in Lancashire.
He has also been strongly suspected to have been 'Jack the Ripper',
responsible for some of the Whitechapel murders, four years earlier. Deeming was
convicted and hanged after a four-day trial.